E?V v. i-w 'v-f s jt - " fDELTHIA, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMMK 25, H m EVENING PUBLIC LEDGE -& JL fubltc Eefcger EVEMWG TELEGRAPH ILIC LfcDGER COMPANY BeVrtMC CURTIS, PimmisT I.udlnaton. vice Prrild'M: John C fetarr and Treaeurer; PhlllDS. Colline. fllllama, John J. Spurseon, Dlrectore. EDITORIAL, BOARD! - Ctar)e ft. K, CcaTia, Chairman i kftW lt.SMtI.KT i . . .,, , , Editor ' C MARTIN,.,. General Ruitncaa Manager Red dally at PtaLlo I.DnoM Hulldlne, ulependencn Square, Phtladelphla. CavriaL Hroad and Cheatnut Strata i cm i..vrj-uitioi iiuiiainc FK..t., i 208 Metropolitan Toner ... 4113 roru fiuuainc en.,.., loo ruiierton iiuiiiiinr a.iy ..........,... .1W2 Tribune Bulldlnc jt cr.o uur,AUfll STON BCBttr. t B. Cor. Pennerlvanla Ave. and 14th St, rauc IloatAC.. .... ,.t...Thf Sun Ilulldlnc in. BoaCAC...... .. ...... tendon Timts - SUBSCRIPTION TERMS KvsNlsft PtBLlo Lkpgbh la..served to sub- In Philadelphia and surrounding towna rata ot twelve (12) centa per week, payable arrlf-r. mail to points outside of Philadelphia. In Inltad Statei. Canada, or United Hlaten pes- ions, ooataae free.nftr (r,0l centa per month. .la -all foreign countries one ($1) dollar per Sr Kl 'amra Suharrlherit wishing atlrlresa chanced anuji give old na well aa new address, MKT j tmVL. 3W WAUtT KEY8TONK. M AIM ioOO Waasgs f PrtT' JL4ire$a oil communication to Evening Public ,-v.jtlAugrr, innrprnarncr aquorrj j-niiuuciptu. $ Member of the Associated Prest STMTS' ASSOCIATED PIZES8 is exclu- imveut entitled to the use for republication Saaf.aJj netcs dltvatches credited to it or not HmhtruHMe credited in this paper, and alto sitfcevfocal nrws published therein. lAff;AJt riohtt of republication of special dts- ttches herein are also reserved. BVi,, .Philadelphia, WVdn.iJ.j. Srplrmbrr S3, 1918 HE HADN'l THE NERVE aMTATOR SMITH has again done the ex- E:r a am usual vim mm, aner starting out uy Lfmpulse In the right direction he has wab- E'bled around Into the back-track of "the i Males t way." K'When he tore up Sheriff Itansley's re- quest for a "voluntary contribution to fc!tthe Vare committee and contemptuously I. "threw It Into the waste-basket, he was on bVTJL . , .T , . sirre. maniy ana courageous irucn. riao ne J pursued this course to the end he could gpjiave been forgiven much that he has done i,0Tnot done in the Mayor's office, for it l! would have emboldened a lot of needy municipal employes to defy the political ! ttacers. ?? 'Titi ! ivAd inn Tntmli In pvriAi-t Ilia rp. ,fy -v ....... ........ - v lution based on right Impulse caved as fin as his bold act of Insubordination to ' . . ... . .. . . Wi S i real masters oi Jiiy nan necame Pf fwn to the public. f Sit would oe interesting to Know unetner Kj Aat thousand-dollar check happened to be .written on yellow paper. A. tt.A -witrir-tt nf t.nhnnnn lh Tnrla BJwJll soon be suggesting; a revision of the K&Itevised Version. Br! . THAT OTHER PHILADELPHIA 1HE redemption of Philadelphia is immi nent. Neither Mayor Smith nor the lyiittle fellow" nor "L'ncle" Dae Lane has IfaMty immediate cause for anxiety, for the Philadelphia that lias been saved is on !-ii.banIc8 of the Jabbok, not the Delaware. fe&tolemy Philadelphus named it after EuSCSisetf a couple" of millenniums ago. It's jXjJrO-called Rabbath Ammon, after the chil-" bjEjn oi Ammon, iracms tneir oriKin to it nephew ot Abraham, and it lies on "yjrllejaz railway, toward which the Turk"), te'lliefhy' Allenby's steam-roller, are now fuaftiflK- P4It Is the evident intention of the forces uivjiiabiuii iiiai uuiuca ui ucicuiru vL l shall not tarry long near the Syrian liladelphla. Their representatives hnc dy been there several centuries andj aorant aespotism nas nourlsneu in tnat, Phlladelphlans now have a chance r:Ut end it and also the opportunity to conf ?Vre honest government with corruption. fk.Aa mor than nrobable thev will rlsn Ri-- help drive their tyrants Into the ob- jKHylon of the desert. i'miaQeipnia on cue .laoooK, inoucn a iHttle town, is to be envied. It stands on tM threshold of a new freedom east of , Jordan. Vfpr is dislodging Its gang. Com- sons are painful. What's In a name? f v. fere Is this difference between Xapo- Allenby. The former retreated from The latter advanced there. tW St-AUNfeKlSftl JJIACINlMfcUf tSTTIS 'unfortunate that faults alwav.s K"lBvite a concentration of attention that perfection rarely commands. The enthu 'aUusai and earnestness manifested by the Wprkers at Eddystone on the occasion of aaWcretary Daniels's visit must have been i?wrirlalnK to those who are obsessed with fcWltelief, that the war Industries hereabouts -.Slackers, as a matter of fact, are far k.fewer than most people suppose. There kfe'-nrobably a slacker or two In almost 'every community. There are slackers to B befound now and then in Congress. Xo organization is without a few shirkers. ,v!rjjit;ls because of the consistency of our 'War- enort and the steady application of the!, majority of the men and women in LitKeVwar Industries that the occasional MlC;ier a conspicuous. Si' fa.'-nlFn irlanf rtf na attitntln., tn T)UM. - ,w. t r w Miv ailuauuii 111 A lllltl- iphla. at the results being achieved in Lgtin factories, the shipyards and the w 'InHiiatrtoct rl!itH tn tha na nm,1 ite that nineteen men out of every Mty are doing their work efficiently Dipdwell. v T?4 ViJThe Turks never had any business fn iTHoly Land anyway, and ther seem to W'realUlng it. VM f v,il CHURCH AND THE MOTORS flffBRprMEN and all other persons who hafan Instinctive concern fo human 'Have been troubled for years by ent disinclination of men to go on Sunday. Mcent disturbance in Lansdowne, a .citizen held that he had a right Hjft' Mi motor to take him and his r to cnurcn on gusiess aunuays, u-,,-quick and efficient means to .an tMeftttMel church attendance. aunaays are me ruie in an ter- ast of the Mississippi. If the fuel ration will announce formally that i dictum doesn't apply to church- Spirituality will Instantly become ?1Y who. live In 'Germantown will "attend church In Atlantic City, rban churches hereabouts will - -with u worshipers from COAL DISTRIBUTION THAT DOESiN'T DISTRIBUTE Why It It That Some Sections and Some Dealers Have Coat and Others Arc Passed By? AJtTHY is it that some dealers can Ret ' ' coal for their customers and others cannot? Why is it that some householders, who put in their orders in April, have coal in their cellars, and others, who put in their orders at the same time, nre still waiting for the delivery of the first ton? These are questions which thousands of families are asking: in these cool days. Their houses are uncomfortably cold. They cannot heat them with nas. They can get no coal for the kitchen range, nor any coal for the furnace. And if they could get coal for the furnace, they are nsked not to start a fire there until No vember. Francis A. Lewis, the Federal fuel ad ministrator for the city, has charge of the distribution of coal. One naturally looks to him for an explanation. But nothing that Mr. Lewis has said thus far explains. Conditions in the northern part of the city nnd suburbs are worse than in other districts. Mr. Lewis says that the coal shortage there is due to the increase in population following the erection of new houses. This does not explain why some coal dealers in that section have been supplied with so small a quantity that they are unable to deliver even one ton of coal or deied by old customers. Nor docs it ex plain why persons moving into the dis trict have been able to get coal delivered from dealers outside of the territory into which they have moved. The fuel administration has ordered that coal is to be delivered from the yard nearest to the home of the purchaser. Yet coal dealers have delivered coal to men who have moved outside of their dis trict, while the dealers within the district to which the families have moved have no coal in their yards. It is evident that something is wrong with the method of distribution. No one is complaining that he is unable to get a full supply of coal in his cellar at the present time, although the fuel adminis trator has been calling upon the people to fill their cellars in the summer. But there is complaint because of the inability to get coal into cellafs that are empty in spite of the observance by the house holders of all the retaliations of which they have been able to learn. The coal Itax been m,ned. The monthly reports issued by the Anthracite Bureau of Information show that more tons have been taken out of the ground this year than in the same period last year. We arc told that moie coal has been shipped to Philadelphia than is usual in the summer months, and we have alo been told that coal has been shipped to other parts of the country in order that they might be supplied before cold weather sets in, and that most of the coal used here is brought in during the wirlter. We are near the mines and it can be got here quickly. But one looks through these explana tions in vain for any litrht on the reason for the empty coal yards and the empty coal cellars in the northern part of the city. They are no more illuminating than the explanation that the cellars and yards there are empty because new houses have attracted new population. They do not tell why certain little local dealers have been passed by in the dis tribution of coal. They do not indicate that there was a proportional distribu tion among all dealers based upon the amount which they are accustomed to handle, for there has been no such dis tribution. Unless something is done and done at once to r-zlieve the shortage there will be suffering and sickncc as a direct result of the failure of the fuel administration to secure an equitable distribution of such cool as has reached the city. And if colds contracted by children and old persons develop into fatal pneumonia, the responsibility will be placed directly upon the shoulders of those whose neglect has produced the present intolerable con ditions. No matter how much soft drinks are said to be favored, It Is perfectly evident that within a few months we shall be un able to get near beer. AN INTERNATIONAL HAT w, HEX Senator J. Hamilton Lewis but toned up his amethystine vest and adjusted his elephant's breath spats und took his gold-headed cane firmly in hand and departed radiantly overseas to assure himself that there were no weak spots In the Allied lines and that the navies of civilization were p.'operly disposed, he did not receive a Distinguished Service medal or a V. C. or yet the Croix de Guerre. His tory must explain, In calmer hours than these, this grievous lapse of kings and presidents. Yet Senator J. Ham was decorated He was decorated In Piccadilly, where a Lon don haberdasher, touched In the sensitive heart that all London haberdashers have by the charm and statellness of the visitor from afar, and moving In a sudden blaze of emotion, thrust upon him a hat. The hat was given without reward or price. It Is no ordinary hat. Indeed, there Is said to be no other hat like it in all this wide and various world. It Is a high hat of silk and of the color of cream a neutral tone best fitted to catch and radiate In a colorless world the glad lights of morn Ins and the dim effulgence cf glorious eve. The brim. Is broad. The crown Is higher than that of any other hat. There are rich ribbons upon It. He who made It had held it at the kingly price of six quid. The emotional tumult m which Senator Ham returned with the Hat would make Jt appear that tears may havo been shed at fhe bestowal. Hands were wrung. Senator Lewis does not deny that his heart melted at the overwhelming demon stration of International amlty that he met with In Piccadilly. The Hun heard of lit, -- m Wt-tof-MSumali"t -T L'-boats lurked In the night and torpedoed the ship on which the Senator returned with his treasure to his native land. Hut through storm and darkness and nil the perils of the deep the most sublime of kellys was guarded, to be landed ut last upon our beloved shores. It Is not surprising that Senator Lewis tells of all this In a Voice of emotion or that a man so sensitive as he' should lmye been moved to eloquence at the gince of a humble shopkeeper who co appropri ately made good the shortcomings of cap tains and governments by making honor able tribute to the emissary of nn Allied Power. Hut In the news from Washing ton there is a suggestion that Senator Lewis is disposed to regard that Hat as his own exclusive property. This Is a re grettable attitude. The hat Is an emblem. It should, so to speak, be put to a national use. Secretary Daniels assures us that he has solemnly resolved to march Into Berlin with the I'nlted States Marine Hand. The one weakness of Mr. Daniels Is icvealed in his Incurable disposition, to wear the soft black slouch hat which Is ever pain fully reminiscent of the fevers of popu lism. Why shouldn't Senator Lewis lend the gieat hat to Mr. Daniels for this su preme occasion? We could thus mock the Huns who tried so desperately to sink It and we could show Berlin that we, too, know not only how to kick a dog, but how to pile dog on when the occasion re qtilies It. N'ow ii the time for the girls to lay In a stock of heels They will be low, the con servationist manufacturers Inform us, no matter how high shoes may go COMPOUNDING PIRACY GKftMANY'S hit seven interneil test bribe to Spain is rned Hun steamships as compensation for the destruction of 3D per cent ot Spanish shipping and persis tent submarine outrage. The off-'r will probably he accepted, since King Alfonso's country, onre a synonym for p-ide, dally undergoes Ignominy in the effort to pre serve that hopeless archaism, lieulialit.v It Is no surprise, of course, to leal n that the Hun compounding of mtirdi1- and phacy is simply another dirty ileal. It Is worth while remembering, however, that the Herman proposal is marie to a'pation at peace. Contemptible barler'ng of this Kind Is interestingh inrik-.Vive of the bar gains that would have been suggested had any negotiations been attempted between the Teutons and their fois A land where polities Is adjourned may think It.s-Klf sophisticated, hut none the less the development of primary Instincts Is more than perceptible espiclallv in ."evv Jersey. GUDEIU'S ACAIN r; TUB Playgrounds Assoclnt'ou has the :lme and nionev necesaiy for a suit lo test the validity of the Mayor's ictinn In ousting a lioatri of directors and putting K. II. nuriehus, :ijioltieal favorite, in a cushioned job. It will be supported in the fight bv public opinion The Mayor has done his worst with the playground system. His whole rourse In the nuriehus case lias tended to lesson the confident e nnd Intel est of the public in nn eMremelv important unci piomlslng branch nf community service. If some of his mis takes can be undone the playground sys tem will be the better for It. The captme of Acre recalls (lie greatest davs of the Crusades. The Historic Town of Acre Yew town have sfen mure Hclitlng It nas taken liv the Cru saders Ihe Allies of that day in 11(14. In 11 ST the sultan Saladln recaptured it In 1ll the Crusaders got It again and held It for a hundred cars. during which time It became the headquarters nf the famous Knights of St .lohu In 12DI il fell to Dip Saracens, In 1517 taken again by the Turks In 1799 Napoleon's armies besieged It for clxty-one rias. It has been continuously in Turkish hands since 1SI0 And now Allenby has It. A pieat many persons Tliey MlKht sire concerned about Help Hie whereabouts of college cheer leaders nnd worried about the work that they may do to help crush the Hun. It is a difficult prospect. Yet the cheer leaders might help at the shipjards by beginning a demonstra tion of riotous enthusiasm every time a ball player drives n rivet. Our Idea of a movie IliijHlt.v nt Home queen is not fairly represented by any of the girls In the pictures. It always brings to mind the austerely lovely and frigidly aloof joung thing who condescends to sell tickets from a glass cage at the entrance. A ceitain statesman J.I I tic t'P " was given a curd-col- Tliat I.lil ored plug hat, but he shows a reluctance to wear it. Is tills due to any instinctive feel ing on his part that he cannot put under neath it anything that would do the lid justice? The fuel chiefs in Coaled W a s h I n g t o n who Comfort turned on the steam radiators In their of fice before the allotted time seem not to have been public benefactors until their act Is given full consideration. Then It makes us hot to think about it. With the advent of Watch Your Inatept cool weather shimmer ing ankles disappear behind the occluding spat And fair rhoul ders, conversely, reappear from under the summer-long furs. Germany seems to Or Windbag- have been unfortunate In her choice of allies. The only ones that have really been Snuch help to her are the Bolshevtkl, and they are In the nature of a windfall. The fact that the Kaiser hasn't an nounced where he will lint There'll He Xo Turkey eat his Christmas din ner this year Inclines one to believe that the Entente has taken over his engagement book. The news that Allied Will Tliey airmen have been Take a Hint? dropping thousands of pamphlets on Conatan- tlnople sufg-esta that now the Turks will have ne excuse for not turning- over a 'new 1 THE GOWNSMAN Has the German Leopard Changed His 'Spots? a X ABSORBINGLY Interesting new book aTJl's "Genserlc, King of the Vandals and Klrst Prussian Kaiser," by Poultney Blge low. In It we find an historical analogy, sustained with wide learning nnd unfailing vivacity, between the old barbarian chief of a Haltjc tribe who overran Spain and cross-Ing-lntb Africa In the year 427 founded there tho empire of the Vandals, and the' present marauders Into western Kurope. Genserlc wns more or less an upstart i the Hohcn zollerns ore likewise upstarts, except f" the blood that thev have contrived to Incorpo rate by means of politic marriages. It must be hard for the haughty Hnpsburgs who are nt least somebody to endure some things at the hands of the descendants of the crafty burgher counts of Nuremberg who built a d nasty on a mortgngo thriftily foreclosed. But Mr. Blgelow's analogies are not only biological and historical; they extend, with some striking results, Into the barbarian war fare, the conscienceless politics, the mouth ings of religion, the megalomania- and brutal materialism and the utte- faithlessness of tho Teutonic Junker of the afth century and his reincarnation, through Frederick, pre posterously called "the Great," nnd some other like worthies, In the present Kaiser. The book Is n triumphant refutation of the wire-drawn distinction between "good old Germany" of the jears prior to 1913 and the ravening beast that we now know. THEHE was an old fellow In the days of Queen Elizabeth, just of the years of Shakespeare, who held a traveling fellow ship of his I'nlverslty of Cambridge and spent several years abroad, among other countries, In Germany. The traits that he observed are the traits of tho people today; though the Junker as such was concealed from excellent old Kjnes Moryson. lie noted the German addiction to gross living, for example, and to bibulous sittings. He noted the Teutonic heaviness and the Teutonic savagery when aroused He told how the German people ran after a third-rate London company of actors that he was ashamed to acknowledge . because the Germans had no drama nor much literature of any kind for that matter at that time. Morjson was- no prophet, only a clever traveler with his eyes open. His "Itinery" is a very divcit Ing book ASTOHY used to be told In Dresden but not by Germans of bow, on the narrow footway of the bridge between the old and the new town, an American gentleman was accustomed to meet a German olllcer every mnrnlni- ,n,liit- Iho other l!LV. The Olllcer marched straight oh his way and, to avoid' collision, the American hail stepped asme for several mornings. Hut the American was a man of spirit So. one day, he did not step aside, anil the Inevitable collision took place. To the astonished olllcer be said: Tomorrow, sir. I shall make way for you; the day after, .vim will make way for me. I wish you good morning.'' On the morrow, the American kept his word, stepping politely nslile ft the olllcer to pass. But the next duv then' was a violent collision, and the olllcer drew his sword, which the American suatihcil out of his hand anil tossed Into the mi"' Tin- s-qucl tells that the officer committed suicide, as he could not challenge so lnvv a thing as an Ameilcan w1. HEN the Gownsman wns a very .voting man lie once got lost In Germany but that story will Keep for another time. It wns then that he met and walked with two .voting, students of Ilrcslati who were mar velously curious about the strange, new variety of being, an American. "That pencil with which ou write, what is it made of?" "Gold." They eyed each other skeptically. "How do ou catty all tho money that you ntcd fiT so long a journey?" "I don't carry It." And a long explanation ensued as to the nature of a letter of credit, an explanation which they credited not. "And how largo did you say Is the city In which ou live?" "Nearly two millions" They exchanged glances, and one of them perceptibly slit tigged his shoulders. At last your embryo Gownsman said- "Lock bete; nti don't seem lo believe a word that I tell ou lij my country when one man Implies that another Is a liar, the reply Is a blow; the icpllei knocking down the intpller if the lirrpllcr is not too quick for lilin " 'Oh, we don't feel that way about it," said one of my joung Germans. "We were only admiring your netve. You tell us nil these Impossible things precise! as it they were really so." What a German does n it personal! know does not exist. Another way of putting it is' Nothing exists which a German does not know. " ON T1IK same journey, n young American was sitting alone at breakfast, rather late, in one of those laige semlopen rooms which abroad they designate a "garden." It was In Halle and n somewhat cool morning, wherefore the young ("the Gownsman") American kept on his hat. The wind always blows In the university town of Halle, and so do some of Its students that the Gowns man lias known, even though not of German birth There were few people In the room, and presently the .voting American was amazed to have the big hi ad-waiter or some such functionary come up to him and ask Impudently If people kept on their hats In rooms in America. Looking up .the Ameri can saw In a moment the reason for this impeitlnence. Two German olllcers and a civilian were seated at some distance, evi dently observing the result of what they had started. The American retorted very quietly: "I'll remove my hat when those officers across the room take oft their caps." He looked for something to happen. Nothing happened. FOUR months before the opening of the war, the Gownsman was asked to go to Weimar, to take part In the celebration of the fiftieth anniversary of the founding of the German Shakespeare Society. Dr. Haul Shorey, of Chicago, lhe"exchange professor" of the year at Berlin, wns the only other representative from "the wilds of North America " Some of the diverting things that happened on this occasion belong to times they can never come again when vve could only laugh at the Germans. Among these wero their condescension to Shakespeare and scholarship about him In his own tongue, and tho literal performance of "Richard the Third" to the bitter end on Bosworth Field, not reached until long after midnight. It was about this performance that a learned authority from Lelpslc said confidentially to the Gownsman "Xow, otter all, how much better Shakespeare sounds In German." And the Gownsman responded heartlessly and obviously: "Yes, to a German." Tlin moment was that, It will be remem bered, when ilexlco was making herself particularly unpleasant, and all the Teddies were urging unspeakable things. The func tions of this celebration of the anniversary of a German learned society. Involved a luncheon at the "residence," at which the Duke of Saxe-Welmar presided as host. He was a kindly man, trying to do what was expected ot him, and uniformed as a general fittingly to do honor to a poet. After lunch, ho spoke pleasantly to each of his guests. When he greeted us Americans he added In his precise and hesitant English: "And now you Americans will take Mexico." We dis claimed any such ambitious and Iniquitous thought In the American mind, little knowing that war with Mexico was a part of a great world plan already made for us In Germany, But the definite reply came; "That is all very well; you will now take Mexico." The mental process Is preposterously -simple and logical. Germany would; fools might not, Americans are not fools. Ergo, "you will take Mexico." Q. E. D. And our host passed on to the promulgation of another 'ducal opinion for the next group. Sac City, as the latest candldatn fnr launching- at Hog Island Is called, seems well enough named when we recall our In- in aporiginea. utnerwiae, however, It suj. ,Mwmia- auffgariogas. WHAT A CONGRESSMAN SEES Somhcrrkly Letter Touching on the Washington Doings of Personalities Familiar to I'hiladelphians By J. Hampton Moore , Washington. II. C, Sept. 25. A LETTER from Attorney General Francis ShunR Blown to Bunking Commissioner Dan Lafean concerning the right ot building associations to put their surplus funds In Liberty Bonds stlired up a hornets nest, the (thoes of which finally landed In the Treasury Department. Pennsylvania has le ceiveri credit for putting the building associ ation upon the map and Philadelphia derives Its title "The City of Homes" very largely from the fact that the building assoc'atlons have given unusual encouragement to men of small means to save and become home ownets. The Buiiuiug associhiiuii j.tBut ... Pennsylvania was organized September, 1 8 i. Its present president Is Joseph H. Palst, who was formerly chief clerk of Select Council, nnd its secretary Is Michael J. Brown, who was at one time president of the national organization of building associations. The league has always had Its friends In Coun cils and In tho Legislature, and especially when James Clarency. or tho Nineteenth Ward, and Robert T., Cot son, of Frankford, were members of one body or the, other. What the building association men now com plain of is tho Attorney General's ruling which, from their point of view. Interferes with their right to Invest association Junds In Llbertv Bonds. This Is the matter that has been brought up to the Secretary of the Treasury. Questions of this kind, affecting as they do the rights of States and of State olliclals. however, are always viewed with caution by the national authorities. They do not, as a rule, deem it wise to Interfere In what are commonly denominated "States Rights." In the revenue bill building asso ciations generally have been treated as non profit making organizations, except for mu tual benefit. They are put upon substantially the same basis as agricultural associations organized for mutual benefit, but not for profit. It is, therefore, unlikely that Wash ington will enter Into the dispute between 'the Attorney General and the building asso ciations. It Is a battle that will have to be fought out ;it home. ANY one who has heard Edward Brooks, Jr.? address the court will appreciate the force of his reasoning, but when It comes to an argument before the AVays and Means Committee of Congress, bent upon raising to nnn nnn.oon of revenue, that Is another matter. Mr. Brooks, on behalf of the Orpheus Club, Joins Mr. Van Rensselaer, of the Sym phony Orchestra, and others In the appeal for what is' regarded as the very existence of kindred organizations. If the tax on dues and admissions Is raised as the bill provides. The Orpheus Club, like other Philadelphia musical organizations, nas wiimn mem bership some of the most prominent Phlla delphlans Doctor Van Lennep, of the Union League; Jack Holton, of the Maritime Ex change, and Billy Haupt, Included. There are many others in professional and business life who pine for the lyre when they tire of the muses. When the plight of the Philadelphia Symphony was laid before the taxing com mittee, Cleveland and one or two other cities having similar organizations Joined In the appeal, but the majority on the committee feared that to make exceptions wouM widen the door so that professional organisations might be permitted to pobs through without bearing their fair share of the tax burden. THE Secretary of War, Mr. Baker, Is In Europe, and rumor has It that he may remain over, there for some time. As the Secretary of War, having under his direc tion the millions of men that have entered the country's military service and the bil lions of dollars that the country la spending to sustain the war, Secretary Baker has necessarily been the BUbject of many in quiries, some of which pertain to his ability and antecedents. Sometimes we can get a better understanding of a man or a situation by local comparisons. When the late Judge Clayton, of Delaware County, toured Europe, which he did nt every opportunity, he sent home letters that found their way Into the local newspapers and, subsequently Into a book of reminiscences, In which ho would compare the Applan Way with some local boulevard, or the River Scheldt with the Delaware, or still better, the Moselle with Hi Rchtivliilll Tt Ynaria thik -ihlnsr mnni tin. 1 darindbl-toth-iolkg yfaad, jwt, hw AND ITS FORCE IS AS WE MAKE IT LllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllH i.r"'i-i" ?j?,. . '"WaS: ft ''-i-?- ?-" . J"Vm3I abroad. Now as to Secretary Baker. Per haps the easiest way to size him up would be to put him on the same platform with Franklin Spencer Edmonds, formerly of the Phlladelph'a Central High School. He Is not unlike Edmonds In physique, In ability to talk or In trend nf mind. He has a scholastic record not unlike that of Edmonds, is a quick and teady speaker and pracilc?d law before entering public life. He was not averse to politics, having been private sec letary lo Postmaster General Wilson In 1896-7, assistant city solicitor, solicitor a,nd afterward Mayor of Cleveland, O. At the present time he Is a member of tho Ohio State Democratic Committee, Thus Edmonds, who also dabbled In politics, Is a fair match for Baker, except that his political activities have not generally been so successful as have those of the Secretary. Another point of similarity: Mrs. Baker occasionally appears In public as a singer, while Mrs. Edmonds, who Is a daughter of Judge Abraham M. Beitler, Is doing "a man's part" 1u the cause of suffrage. As Baker nnd Edmonds are now both in Europe, the latter serving with the Young Men's Chris tian Association, it might do no harm if they should compare notes. I F THE people who believe we ought to save white paper really desire to accom plish something they would begin with the Federal departments and particularly with the bureaus and commissions that aro wast ing It, The number of publications, reports, pamphlets and cheap departmental advertis ing matter, nil tending to bolster up the pa triotic efforts of bureaucratic rivals has been so alarmingly on the Increase that the waste baskets off Washington have been bulging out at the sides. Congress has been taking note of this waste, and If 'it con tinues there may be an Inquiry Into fhe use less and duplicated efforts of literary patri ots to attract public attention and Intrench themselves, upon the Government payroll. The Postmaster General gets blamed for a great many things, but he has recently com menced to take notice. He Is calling down deadhead issues and otherwise reducing the "poundage" of mail matter, for that Is about what It has come to be. Few members of Congress are able to keep up with the dead head newspapers and magazines that come in from all sections of the country. The socialistic stuff has already been cut down to a large extent, but tho push kept up during the consideration of the revenue bill and showerr little signs of abatement until "the dead line" was drawn on the dead heads. - THE annual conventions ot the Atlantic 'Deeper Waterways Association, which have been organized In Philadelphia since the association was founded, In 1907, Invari ably attract a number of men from the na tional capital. The Boston convention this week is no exception to the rule. In addi tion to Secretary Redfield, of the Depart ment of Commerce, United States Senator Fletcher, of Florida, chairman of the Com mittee on Commerce, and Congressman Small, of North Carolina, chairman of the Rivers and Harbors Committee, are in at tendance. For twelve years these conven tions have been alternating up and down the Atlantic coast to the evident satisfaction of the' people of the seaboard States, who be lieve in the Improvement of our transpor tation facilities. Beginning at Philadelphia, In 1907, they proceeded from city to city, north one year and south the next, until. last year, when Miami, the southernmost point, was reached. This year, in going to Boston, the convention attains its "farthest north," The delegates have been a long time getting to Boston, but they are now making the most of It, and from all accounts are being delightfully entertained, At every conven tion thus far held, no matter what the dis tance from headquarters, the Delaware Jllver Interest has always been largely In evidence. They have cheerfully co-operated with the delegates from other waterways territory and have established on era ot good feeling along the coast. There Is a strong probability that the next convention will be hela in Charleston, S. C. If It Is, tho famous "Battery" will be as In terestlng to the northern delegates as the Boston "Common" is this week to visitors frWav!.".ta. Indications of a Dry Spell TJOTH the House and the Senate have --' voted to make the nation "dry" after June 30 of next year. Tho proposition Is In the form of a rider to the agricultural appropriation bill. Tho manufacture of light wines must cease on May 1 and the sale of all Intoxicating beverages must end on June 30 If the President approves the plan. The House has attempted- to make an exception In favor of Imported wines, as tho State Department has informed Congress that the ambassadors of France and Italy have railed attention to the fact that the prohibition of the sale of all wines will seriously affect the wine-growers of their countries, who export large quan tities to the. United States. Hut the House voted down the proposed amendment. Tho form In which the House arid the Senate have approved the "bone-dry" measure differs. Conference committees have been appointed to harmonize the dif ferences. It seems to be certain that the sale of all forms of Intoxicants will cease at the end of next June. Xo one knows Just when the sale of beer will stop. The President, acting under the authority conferred on him by the food conservation law, has decreed that all brewing operations must cease on Decem ber I of this year, and that after October 1 no beer may be brewed suve from malt and hops -now In the possession of the brewers. The decree Incjudes "near-beer" In the prohibition. It has tfeen estimated that there Is or will be a supply of beer In the country to last six months, or until about the time when the bill now before Congress stop ping the sale of all alcoholic drinks Is to go Into effect. Peace at Any Cost Bernard Shaw wrote a play about a young soldier who had returned to Ireland from the European trenches and after a brief ex perience of the restored joys of domesticity, In a home where bickering was of frequent oc currence, wenb back (o Join the colors, de claring that he longed for a peaceful life, Louisville Courier-Journal. Jack Put One Over on 'Em Pershing surprised the Germans, who had been Informed by the German General Staff that It was the invariable American custom to move on October 1, New York Sun. What Do You Know? . QUIZ ' JV'M ! 'he aiirceon xeneral of the United States arm)'? " 2. What la the meaning of quotidian? 3. Under whose admlnlatratlsn was the Loule- lan territory, purrhaaed from France ami added to the United State? """" 4. Who aald. "If there were no God It wonM bo neeeaaarr to latent him"? 8. What la a crackle? 6. Who waa the Horn an rod of Are and metal norklos? 7. Where la the celebrated Church of St. Sophia. , now uaed aa nioaque? I. What, lathe meanlnx of the Latin expreaalon videlicet ? 0. Which la the "Sunflower State"? 10. How doea the cltr of I aria set Its name? Answers to Yesterday's Ouis 1. General Sir Kdmnnd Alleiihr la In. command of the llrltlah forcea Jn raleetln. tho boat. 5, Mlcblcan la the Wolrerlne State. 4. Thomaa Nelaan rate la the American nmbaa- aador to Italjr. 8, Jeruaalem waa taken by tho Cruaader in loUO. 6. Grorer Cleveland tuld "it U a condition, not n theory, which confront u." 7-.Kcuador l the Spanish word for equator, whl'ti line blued the South American re public. K. A lUurlne Is h atiituette. The word la from the Ita'Un. "nsurlua,'' Ulmlnutlio of "tlruro," ttatue. 0, The fln-t Billable of the word extant bean the. atreaa ar accent. 10, Xorth CaroUaa waa the laateoothern HM t. Starboard romea from the old Knrllnh. "ter. board" (ateerlnr aide). 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